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Equipment to work light calves?
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<blockquote data-quote="inyati13" data-source="post: 983216" data-attributes="member: 17767"><p>I like this topic. I am only 3 years into a small operation But I have to work calves just like guys who have 100 cows. And I do it alone. I have a full system with the sweep. When they get their first shots or need treatment like a stomach tube, etc., I don't put them in the Squeeze chute. I catch them in the sweep area where I pin them in the "slice of the pie" formed by the closing of the sweep gate. I crowd them head first into the narrow part of the "slice of pie", stand behind them (when I can remember, I do use shin and/ or knee guards), Wait for them to settle, and do anything I need to do. If they push back you can catch the bars of the sweep wall and they usually don't get away. I band them in the first two days after they hit the ground. But I missed doing that on a couple that got up to 200 pounds so I had to tie their legs so I could make sure I got the band where I wanted it. I have also closed off the palpitation cage and done them in the alley to the squeeze chute. When they get to that 300 plus weight, I do them in the squeeze chute. My experience has been that these smaller animals are the ones that complicate using the squeeze chute. But I learned on a thread below to shut the head gate on the chute before letting smaller stuff go in. It works well to prevent hip-locks. Also, my chute is on the small side (one cow will not fit in it and the head gate will not close on the bulls neck, Layne knows, he has the same chute) and I can squeeze up even a 300 lb animal. This don't help you much but I am hoping to hear more techniques here that can help others too. Hope you don't mind me throwing this in.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="inyati13, post: 983216, member: 17767"] I like this topic. I am only 3 years into a small operation But I have to work calves just like guys who have 100 cows. And I do it alone. I have a full system with the sweep. When they get their first shots or need treatment like a stomach tube, etc., I don't put them in the Squeeze chute. I catch them in the sweep area where I pin them in the "slice of the pie" formed by the closing of the sweep gate. I crowd them head first into the narrow part of the "slice of pie", stand behind them (when I can remember, I do use shin and/ or knee guards), Wait for them to settle, and do anything I need to do. If they push back you can catch the bars of the sweep wall and they usually don't get away. I band them in the first two days after they hit the ground. But I missed doing that on a couple that got up to 200 pounds so I had to tie their legs so I could make sure I got the band where I wanted it. I have also closed off the palpitation cage and done them in the alley to the squeeze chute. When they get to that 300 plus weight, I do them in the squeeze chute. My experience has been that these smaller animals are the ones that complicate using the squeeze chute. But I learned on a thread below to shut the head gate on the chute before letting smaller stuff go in. It works well to prevent hip-locks. Also, my chute is on the small side (one cow will not fit in it and the head gate will not close on the bulls neck, Layne knows, he has the same chute) and I can squeeze up even a 300 lb animal. This don't help you much but I am hoping to hear more techniques here that can help others too. Hope you don't mind me throwing this in. [/QUOTE]
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